Article from M Brens
The Pilgrims, freshly debarked from the Mayflower in November of 1620, founded a colony in Plymouth, Massachusetts which became known as “America’s Hometown”. Five years later a woman named Grace Berry was buried in Plymouth. Her tombstone tells us that she was the wife of Thomas Berry and that she was about 58 years of age when she died on May 17, 1625.
In 1630 the settlement of Boston began and accordingly, in 1659, a piece of land was designated as the North Burying Ground (Boston’s second cemetery) which later became known as Copp’s Hill. It is in this cemetery that Grace Berry’s tombstone rests today though accounts say she was originally buried Plymouth. As the legend goes her tombstone and presumably her remains were relocated from Plymouth to the Boston cemetery in 1659 when the cemetery first opened. Her slate tombstone is quite elaborate, and is carved with a coat of arms, cherubs and an angel and the inscription which is still very legible today.
There is some controversy though. Why would her tombstone have been relocated to a cemetery 40 miles away which would have been a difficult journey at the time?
Many people believe that Grace Berry actually died in Boston in 1695. Accounts tell of a young boy named George Darracott, who changed the “9″ in the date of her death to a “2″ with his jackknife in the 1820s. It seems other tombstones were altered in that same fashion and he must have got caught in the act.
However, there is the account of an older man who came to Copp’s Hill in July 1878 with his daughter and granddaughter looking for the final resting place of one of his ancestors. He had with him a notebook, yellowed with age, that bore a drawing of a tombstone with an accompanying inscription that exactly matched that of Grace Berry’s tombstone. Scribbled at the bottom of a page in the notebook was a footnote that indicated the date Grace’s tombstone had been moved from Plymouth to Boston.
Another Account: Apparently it is that erected to the memory of Grace Berry, wife of Thomas Berry, who, according to the inscription, died May 17, 1625, or five years before Boston was settled. The stone is of old Welsh slate, well preserved and with the carving quite distinct; the edges are ornamented with curves and at the top are carved two cherubs and the angelof death. There is also cut a shield, without quartering of arms. The marks of British bullets are visible, this stone, like many others on the hill, having been a target for the British soldiers during the siege of Boston.
Grace Berry, who was the daughter of Major John Jayman, a rope-maker, was living in the flesh with her husband, Thomas Berry, in their house near the Ship Tavern, at the junction of Ship (North) and Clark streets.
Not matter what this will be researched as I am curious on this Berry line and more following later.
Genealogy Research, Family Stories and Photographs, Archival Resources, historical articles, antique origin,
Monday, March 20, 2017
Is This The Oldest Known Tombstone in the United States? Grace Berry, wife of Thomas Berry at Old Copp's Hill Boston
Monday, March 6, 2017
Antiques: The Haunted World of Martin Brothers Pottery Soaring High
The Martin brothers: Robert, Walter, Edwin, and Charles, born to Robert Thomas Martin and Margaret Fraser, made the The Martinware Pottery (1873-1923) that is now a very hot item fetching well over its estimate. Today the same sentiment is felt for their pieces as it was in 1912: "wonderful creations [which] are now eagerly sought after by art connoisseurs in all quarters of the world."
According to sources the brothers themselves lived unpretentious lives "holding aloof from all municipal and social affairs." Many who noticed their humble pottery on Havelock Road ‘associated with it personalities so vivid and remarkable as Messrs Martin, and work so graceful and beautiful as Martinware."
The Martin Brothers started in Fulham in 1873. Robert Wallace, the oldest of the lot trained as a sculptor and founded the Martin Brothers Pottery. The shop and office in High Holborn was managed by Charles Douglas Martin (1846-1910) the second of the four brothers involved in the business.
Walter, Robert and Edwin Martin outside the Southall Pottery
Between 1873-77 the pots were made in Fulham (Pomona House) and then from 1877-1914 in Southall. Martin Brothers' reputation rested on the production of bizarre and grotesque animal forms which the brothers began producing in the 1880s. In the Census of 1911 his son, Clement Robert Martin (born c.1883) is listed as an 'Art Pottery Manufacturer'. He later went on to run the company after his father's death.
According to sources the brothers themselves lived unpretentious lives "holding aloof from all municipal and social affairs." Many who noticed their humble pottery on Havelock Road ‘associated with it personalities so vivid and remarkable as Messrs Martin, and work so graceful and beautiful as Martinware."
The Martin Brothers started in Fulham in 1873. Robert Wallace, the oldest of the lot trained as a sculptor and founded the Martin Brothers Pottery. The shop and office in High Holborn was managed by Charles Douglas Martin (1846-1910) the second of the four brothers involved in the business.
Walter, Robert and Edwin Martin outside the Southall Pottery
Between 1873-77 the pots were made in Fulham (Pomona House) and then from 1877-1914 in Southall. Martin Brothers' reputation rested on the production of bizarre and grotesque animal forms which the brothers began producing in the 1880s. In the Census of 1911 his son, Clement Robert Martin (born c.1883) is listed as an 'Art Pottery Manufacturer'. He later went on to run the company after his father's death.
The Martin Brothers Pottery Studio, Walter at the window, Wallace to the right and Edwin in the window Photo from Ealing Library of London also the biography information.
Martin Brothers stoneware has been strong now for years and this auction was affirmation of the trend. Top lot of the sale was #7, a large bird (14¼”), signed and dated 1889, fashioned after the 19th Century English politician, Benjamin Disraeli. Estimated to sell for $100,000 – $150,000, it sold for $233,000, including buyer’s premium — to my knowledge, the world record for any Martin Brothers object at auction. From Philip Chasen Antiques
Heritage Auctions 20th Century Design sale November 18, 2016 Included in the sale were eight lots of Martinware. Lot #79005 was a rare Martin triple bird, 7¾” tall. It sold above its high estimate of $30,000, realizing $40,000, including buyer’s premium. From Philip Chasen Antiques
Martin Brothers Stoneware "Wally" Bird Jar and Cover Skinner Auctions European Furniture & Decorative Arts - 2776B Sold for $31,980 2025
Martin Brothers Stoneware Humidor Sold at Skinner Auctions 57,000 in 2013
Martin Brothers Glazed Stoneware Angler Fish-form Water Jug, dated March, 1887, enamel glazed, finely carved and incised figure showing open mouth with carved teeth, wide eyes and scaled body with tail wrapped underneath, earth and cobalt blue tones, incised R.W. Martin & Bros. London & Southall mark, ht. 9 in. Estimate $3,000-5,000 Sold for $53,325 2009 Skinner Auctions
A collection of Martinware grotesques: birds and imps
New York Times Article Rita Reif, November 1981
The first major show in America of the weird and astounding ceramic art of the Martin Brothers opened most appropriately last night while goblins and grotesques were abroad in the land. The Halloween preview of ''Boobies, Boojums and Snarks'' at Jordan Volpe gallery, 457 West Broadway, was in a two-room space in which the Martins' London shop with its wooden showcases is re-created and a Gothicarched stone-walled fantasy setting beyond. The latter suggests the tortured minds of these men by the use of eerie sounds, dripping water in a darkened pool, gnarled trees, live moss and mood lighting.
The exhibition is of 121 arrogant-faced, bird-shaped tobacco jars, smirking spoon-warmers, sneering and leering two-faced pitchers, satyr-mask embellished jugs, a spiteful armadillo-shaped toast rack and many creepy looking vases. The show, which remains on view through Feb. 13, will travel to the Delaware Art Museum in Wilmington (March 8 through April 18) and the Everson Art Museum in Syracuse, N.Y. (May 7 through June 27).
The Martin Brothers Pottery was England's first late 19th-century pottery producing art wares and its work the most eccentric. It was founded in 1873 by Robert Wallace Martin, a stone-carver trained in the medieval manner who later studied sculpture. He was the oldest, most mystical and imaginative of the four Martin brothers and he was obsessed with the presence of evil in the world. His was a turbulent mind that brooded on darkness, as his writing suggests: ''My daydreams and my nightly visions teem with Gothic, a very forest of glistening spires ...through loopholes which barely disturbed the gloom within I have seen strings of sleeping bats and in darksome chambers found quaint carvings never intended to see the light.''
Over the next 40 years he and his brothers - Charles, Walter and Edwin - worked first in Fulham and from 1877 on remained in Southall in Middlesex where Wallace, as he was called, was the last to die in 1923. The saltglaze stoneware that they chose as their medium was remarkably suitable for devising the grotesque birds that he began to fashion in 1879, the year he did at least two owl jugs. In the 1880's he began doing his Wally-birds, tobacco jars in the shape of birds that bore little or no resemblance to any living species - save man. Indeed, some were caricatures of such prominent figures as Disraeli and Gladstone or Pickwick of Charles Dickens's ''Pickwick Papers.'' He was also extremely fond of devising hauty barristers and overbearing judges.
Biographers have suggested that the Martin brothers' wares reflected the tribulations that haunted their lives. Poverty dogged them throughout the years when they produced their best work - from 1880 to 1910, years when Wallace later said ''my brothers and myself never got more than a labourer's wages.'' Inadequate funds meant they were unable to buy good clay and were limited to firing their kiln twice a year, a complex and crucial process that has been described as ''excruciating events in which the Martins hobbled around damaging toes as they scrambled to cast their furniture into the kiln in an effort to keep the fire alive for the requisite 48 hours.'' Their lives were beset by their stormy relationships with one another, the death of their sister from a monkey bite, the destruction of their shop and two year's work in a fire in 1903, and tragic illnesses.
Ernest Ham painting of the Martins’ pottery, c.1895
Charles, who took care of the London shop, was blamed for that fire. Following it, or so the story goes, he had to be restrained from jumping through a window and within a few hours after that, his hair turned white. In 1909 he was diagnosed as insane and died a year later in an asylum. The fate of Edwin, the brother who specialized in decorating the pottery, was equally horrible. By 1911 he had begun to exhibit signs of the facial cancer which proved fatal in 1915. And Walter, a talented potter, who was responsible for developing the broad range of glazes that characterized their work, banged his elbow while packing the kiln in December 1911. The wound festered, a blood clot developed and the following March, a cerebral hemmorage caused his death.
Wallace survived but produced very few pots after the deaths of his brothers. His work and that of the pottery was collected from the earliest period by such tastemakers of their day as Edward Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rosetti. Queen Victoria also owned some Martin brothers' wares. And by order of Queen Mary, 60 pieces were exhibited at the Paris Exposition of 1914.
Other works were commissioned by the Yale Club, Tiffany & Co. and American collectors. Wallace lived long enough to witness in 1921 collectors vying for Martin wares at a Sotheby's auction in London. At that sale ''water welled in his eyes'' when one bird sold for 50 pounds - well above what they were when they were new.
Recently collectors have pushed prices at auction to stunning levels. A specialty sale in 1978 of the collection of Richard Dennis, a London dealer, sent prices spiraling into four figures. The highest price at auction for Martin brothers' wares was registered last December with the sale of a droll-looking bird for $13,737.
Todd Volpe, co-owner of the Jordan Volpe gallery and a collector of Martin brothers' wares for the last three years, has assembled a remarkable selection from eight collectors for this show. Half of what is on view is available for purchase at from $500 for a small saucy-looking bird to $20,000 for a blue-and-off-white sullen bird which was fired on Halloween in 1896. Mr. Volpe said that this may be the last major exhibition of the Martin brothers' grotesques because they are disappearing into museums. For this reason he did the most elaborate exhibition in the gallery's five-year history, a memorable, highly imaginative show designed by Gregory Gusse. And he had a arresting catalogue produced with superb photographs and an intelligent text by Isabelle Anscombe.
It is $45.The catalogue is not the only book available on these wares. Mr. Dennis is co-author with Martin Haslam of ''The Martin Brothers Potters'' which Mr. Dennis published. This generously illustrated and scholarly account is available at the SoHo gallery for $60.
A pair of vases incised with fish, jellyfish and an eel, in shades of ochre and green on a blue ground incised '10- 1903 Martin Bros, London & Southall', 6in (15.5cm) high - £3400 at Woolley & Wallis of Salisbury on October 2005. From Antiques Trade Gazette
Jardiniere decorated with Passion Flowers by the Martin Brothers. c. 1890. Salt-glazed stoneware, 6 x 8 inches (15.2 x 20.3 cm). Collection: AD Antiques Ltd.
From Collectors Weekly: Martin Brothers London & Southall 12" Pottery Bird w/ Removable Head.
Robert Wallace Martin 1843- 1923 was the pioneer and the dominant force behind his brothers, perhaps because he was the eldest. He was the sculptor and modeller. He began making artistic terra cotta and salt glazed pottery at Pomona House in Fulham in 1872, and the work was fired at Old Fulham Pottery. Aged 20 he had modeled his own portrait in bas relief and was his own subject for a similar work two decades later. He won many prizes for his carvings; the first gained when he was sixteen. He won the first prize at the South London Working Classes Industrial Competition.
He trained both as a sculptor’s assistant and as a stone mason in the yards near the Houses of Parliament. He grew up reading Samuel Smiles, Dickens and Ruskin and so would have known about the debate between those who favored conventional ornamentation and those who preferred irregularity and individuality. He thus modeled his vases and ornaments as grotesques.
He married Elizabeth Martin, 1845-1924. They had two daughters, Amy Mary Margaret, 1877-1952 and Beatrice Mabel, 1880-1882. They had one son, Clement Robert Thomas, 1882-1962, who followed his father in the same profession. Beatrice Mabel married Philip Moore in 1921.
Edwin Bruce Martin lived with his brothers and parents in Brixton until at least 1881. Later he was at Cedar Creek, Mill Platt Avenue, Isleworth, in 1908 and then at 39 Church Road, Southall from at least 1911. He married, at St. John’s church, Isleworth, in 1908, Katherine Winterbourne, 1874-1943. They had three daughters, Olive Margaret Matilda, Alice Beatrice and Margery Winifred.
His role was the etcher and painter of the firm, designing the quaint bird and fish figurines, signing them as the work of the firm, Martin Brothers of Southall and London. He also prepared many of the clays and threw many of the smaller pieces.
He died on 2 April 1915 and his will left £479 19s. He had been suffering from cancer of the mouth for three years, but despite radium treatment, he died at West London Hospital after another operation.
The pottery was continued by Robert Wallace’s son, Clement, after his father’s death. He had already been employed in the business for over a decade and appears to have continued to do so until 1935.
Charles Douglas Martin 1846-1910 began his working life as an office boy. He started working with Robert as a potter, but continued to live with his parents and after his father’s death, with his widowed mother, until presumably, her death. He was the salesman and kept a shop in Brownlow Street, Holborn, to sell the goods until 1908. Greenslade wrote, "After they have left their creators hands at Southall, they are entrusted to the kindly care of Mr Charles D. Martin, the brother who has for so many years superintended the dispersal of them to their “world-wide”patrons, and none has taken a keener interest in or more loved the work. After they have left their creators’ hands at Southall, they are entrusted Happy the connoisseur who should be wandering in the precincts of Holborn, and can find time to drop in and have a look around, for he will easily discover many pots with charms and subtle characteristics which will at once fascinate him, and whether the cost be one shilling or five pounds his fancy can easily be satisfied.
However, the shop was not appealing in appearance; being described as ‘dingy and ill lighted, dusty, obscure’ and ‘forbidding’. The shelves were crammed with stock without any pretence of a more attractive display. It had the atmosphere of ‘an old curiosity shop’. Charles often did not like selling his favourite pieces and so kept these hidden from the gaze of potential buyers.
Unfortunately his health was poor. On 3 March 1910 he was admitted into Wandsworth Asylum and later into the Middlesex County Asylum. He died on 10 June 1910 and was buried in Norwood Cemetery, although he never lived in Southall, presumably because he had the shop to run and elderly parents to care for.
Walter Frazer Martin 1859-1912 lived at various addresses in Southall; 2 Melrose Villas in 1891; 25 Endsleigh Road by 1906 and at 18 Rectory Road in 1911. At Fulham Baptist church in 1906 he married Elizabeth Pattinson, 1873 - and they had at least two children; John Robert Fraser, 1907-2000 and Norah, 1910 - He died at Witley Gardens in Southall on 8 March 1912 and his will left £724 12s. He was the brother who mixed the arts of potter and chemist. He mixed the West of England clays, which they used for their pots, and then stood at the wheel. He also was responsible for the colouring of the pots, and that was his work alone. For his ‘throwing’ he had gained a prize from the Turners’ Company. Yet when he died, his surviving two brothers did not know his colouring secrets, and they wondered if it had been left in a coded message among his papers. His secrets died with him, however.
Ernest Marsh, a great collector of Martinware, wrote a letter of condolence to state: A great artist has finished his work, and his death is a great loss, nationally were the fact but realized. Those of us who had the great privilege of meeting him in association with his work know something of this, and most sincerely deplore that which is now destined to be accomplished by him, especially when it seemed that so many of his ripest years of work were still come and just to hand’.
- Martinwarepottery
- Martin Brothers The Victorian Web
- Woolley and Wallis The Martin Brothers Auction 2006
- Martin Brothers Humidor PBS Roadside Antiques
- Kovels Antique Forum
- British studio pottery
- State Times Advocate Baton Rouge, Louisiana 1979
- Barneby's: Marin Brothers Continue to soar
- Martin Brothers: The Art Institute of Chicago
- The Fitz William Museum Martin Brothers
- Evansville Courier and Press, Evansville, Indiana 1979
- Martin Brothers Fly High The Telegraph Luxury 2016
- Sotheby's Belgravia - Art Pottery & Studio Ceramics - Martin Bros, Doulton, Rie
- Nineteenth-century English Ceramic Art J. F. Blacker
- The Studio, Volume 42
Labels:
20th Century Craftsman,
Antiques,
Art pottery,
auction,
Fulham,
Martin Brothers Pottery,
Ralph Kovel,
Southall,
stoneware,
Victorian Pottery
Saturday, March 4, 2017
Genesi Genesio and Cesira Devoti
A Share from Historian, Author, Jerry Genesio a Member of my Group New England Family Genealogy and History. Jerry recently found the birth records of the first two children born to his paternal grandparents at Olive, Ulster County, New York This is a portrait of the family patriarch Genesi Genesio (1874-1948). He returned to Italy in 1910 to marry Cesira Devoti and they immediately returned to one of the workers' camps at Browns Station, NY, which now rests beneath the Ashokan Reservoir.
According to the ship's passenger list, Genesio was carrying US $30 in cash and he listed as his contact in the US one Giuseppi Cazzarini of 187 Bronx Station, New York, NY. On the same document both Genesio and Cesira name Cesira's brother Luigi Devoti as their emergency contact in Italy. A 1910 US Federal Census, on arrival in New York's Ulster County, Genesio and Cesira Genesi took up residence at the Ashokan Dam project workers' camp in the same building where Giuseppi Cazzarini and Maria Bagassi also lived, and where Giuseppi was listed as the boarding house keeper. This camp was in Brown's Station, a small village in the town of Olive and though much of the town survived, the village of Brown's Station was lost when the reservoir was flooded and it is now under 100 feet of water. Wachusett Dam, Clinton, MA Photos from Digital Commonwealth
Ashokan Dam, Olive, NY The Ashokan Reservoir. View of Olive Bridge dam showing down-stream face of masonry section. Stone crusher and concrete mixing plant in left background. Contract 3. June 21, 1910 and Ashokan workers' family camps.
On February 9, 1911, Genesio and Cesira's first child was born; a son they named Joseph Pappino, but the official recording the document, Mr. John Hibbard, was both careless and callous, dispassionately misspelling names and with a few strokes of his pen forever obscuring an immigrant family's genealogical history. Whether Genesio and Cesira had chosen to name their first born Giuseppi or Joseph we may never know, but regardless of their intent, Mr. Hibbard decided to spell the babe's name phonetically with an Italian-American twist: Joseppi. Hibbard also did not understand that, in Italy, a person's surname is written first and the given name last, which is the reverse of what is customary in the United States, therefore, he decided the family's surname was Genesio. Further, he changed Cesira's name entirely deciding her given name was Devolta, and her maiden name was Chesera rather than Devoti. Hibbard also decided that while Joseph was this mother's only living child, he was her second offspring, though Genesio and Cesira had been married less than eleven months. While this is entirely possible, it is extremely unlikely and without corroboration of any kind. On a positive note, this document does inform us that Genesio was employed on the Ashokan Dam project as a carpenter, if we choose to accept that particular entry as accurate.
Ashokan Dam, Olive, NY The Ashokan Reservoir. View of Olive Bridge dam showing down-stream face of masonry section. Stone crusher and concrete mixing plant in left background. Contract 3. June 21, 1910 and Ashokan workers' family camps.
On February 9, 1911, Genesio and Cesira's first child was born; a son they named Joseph Pappino, but the official recording the document, Mr. John Hibbard, was both careless and callous, dispassionately misspelling names and with a few strokes of his pen forever obscuring an immigrant family's genealogical history. Whether Genesio and Cesira had chosen to name their first born Giuseppi or Joseph we may never know, but regardless of their intent, Mr. Hibbard decided to spell the babe's name phonetically with an Italian-American twist: Joseppi. Hibbard also did not understand that, in Italy, a person's surname is written first and the given name last, which is the reverse of what is customary in the United States, therefore, he decided the family's surname was Genesio. Further, he changed Cesira's name entirely deciding her given name was Devolta, and her maiden name was Chesera rather than Devoti. Hibbard also decided that while Joseph was this mother's only living child, he was her second offspring, though Genesio and Cesira had been married less than eleven months. While this is entirely possible, it is extremely unlikely and without corroboration of any kind. On a positive note, this document does inform us that Genesio was employed on the Ashokan Dam project as a carpenter, if we choose to accept that particular entry as accurate.
Almost 14 months later, on April 1, 1912, Genesio and Cesira had their second child; a daughter they named Rose Maria. Unfortunately, Mr. Hibbard was still on the job and he preferred Rosia Maria. While Mr. Hibbard did record the date of birth correctly, it appears he copied all other information from the birth record of Genesio and Cesira's first born, Joseph Pappino. On July 26 of the following year, a third child and second son arrived at the Genesi home; Peter J. Though three clerks helped with a diligent and exhaustive search of the Town of Olive birth records for the year 1913, we were unable to find Peter's birth record. Jerry notes he has been reading The Last of the Handmade Dams: The Story of the Ashokan Reservoir, and have just learned that John Hibbard was Dr. John Hibbard, surgeon and head physician at a 23-bed hospital built at the construction site to provide care for injured and ill workers. It's quite possible that a nurse or a clerk filled the birth records in and Hibbard did no more than sign them.
Paul Geneseo (1949-1994)
AnceStory Archives found this record Louis Genesio Framingham, MA

Paul Geneseo (1949-1994)
AnceStory Archives found this record Louis Genesio Framingham, MA

Labels:
Ashokan Dam project,
Brown's Station,
Genesio and Cesira Genesi,
Giuseppi Cazzarini,
Luigi Devoti,
New York
Witch Will It BE: Salem Ancestors of 1692 Witch Trials
Labels:
Easty,
Edmund Bridges,
Mary Towne Esty,
Peter Cloyes,
Rebecca Towne Nurse,
Salem Witch Trials
Briggs Family in America
Came across this article published in the newspaper. Various spellings Brigges, Brigs, Bridges, Brug, and Brygges. Sharing with Group New England Genealogy and History Group.



Further Reading Briggs Family of America by Samuel Briggs published 1880 Also check out Briggs Genealogy Page
Labels:
Briggs ancestors,
Briggs Genealogy,
Clement Briggs,
Joan Allen,
Plymouth Colony,
The Fortune ship
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